Genealogy Ludwig » Mary Durrant (1577-1631)

Persönliche Daten Mary Durrant 

Quellen 1, 2
  • Sie ist geboren im Jahr 1577 in Ufford, Suffolk, England.
  • Beruf: The Widow Ring. Came to America w 3 children in 1629..
  • (Arrival) in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
  • (Arrival) in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
  • Sie ist verstorben am 15. Juli 1631 in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States, sie war 54 Jahre alt.
  • Sie wurde begraben vor 1632 in Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.

Familie von Mary Durrant

Sie ist verheiratet mit William Ring.

Sie haben geheiratet am 21. Mai 1601 in Ufford, Suffolk, England, sie war 24 Jahre alt.

Spouse: Mary Ring (born Durrant)

Kind(er):

  1. William Ring  1607-1693
  2. Richard Ring  1609-1675 
  3. Elizabeth Ring  1609-1687 
  4. Susanna Ring  1615-1697 
  5. Andrew Ring  1618-1693 


Notizen bei Mary Durrant


Mary Ring was a member of the Leiden Separatist community. Her husband William had been aboard the Speedwell, sister ship to the Mayflower, intending to voyage across the Atlantic in 1620. William Ring was, however, among the passengers who could not fit aboard the Mayflower when the Speedwell was deemed unseaworthy. He returned to Leiden and died there sometime between 1620 and 1629. Mary Ring arrived in Plymouth in 1629 or 1630. 

Mary Ring seems to have some education : she signed her will herself and her inventory contains books. She also seems to have been a woman of business, with money owed to her by William Bradford and Edward Winslow. 

Mary Ring died in Plymouth in July 1631. 

Mary and William Ring had 3 children, all of whom accompanied their mother to Plymouth and later married in the Colony : Elizabeth Ring who married Stephen Deane, Susanna Ring who married Thomas Clarke, and Andrew Ring who was a minor in 1631 but later married Deborah Hopkins. 

ORIGIN: Leiden, Holland MIGRATION: 1629 or 1630 FIRST RESIDENCE: Plymouth EDUCATION: She signed her will. The inventory included "1 Bible. 1 Dod. 1 Plea for Infants. 1 Ruin of Rome. 1 Troubles of the Church of Amsterdam. 1 Garland of Virtuous Dames. 1 psalmbook. 1 Pennery. 1 pair hinges" valued at 4s. ESTATE: In her undated will, proved 28 October 1633, "Mary Ring being sick in body" bequeathed to "Andrew my son all my brass and pewter ... my new bed & bolster ... two white blankets, one red blanket with the best coverlet ... & the curtains ... three pair of my best sheets & two pair of my best pillowbeers ... one diaper tablecloth & one diaper towel & half a dozen of napkins ... all my woollen cloth unmade except one piece of red which my will is that my daughter Susan shall have as much as will make a bearing cloth and the remainder I give unto Stephen Deane's child"; to "my son Andrew my bolster next the best ... my trunk & my box & my cupboard ... all my cattle ... half the corn which groweth in the yard where I dwell and the other half I give unto Stephen Deane"; "the rest of my corn in other places I give to Andrew my son"; to "Steph. Deane my [illegible] to make him a cloak"; "timber that I lent to Mr. Winslow that cost me a pound of beaver, besides a piece more than they had of me"; to "my son Andrew all my shares of land that is due to me or shall be ... all my tools ... the money that is due to me from the Governor 40s. as also the 40s. of commodities I am to have out of England ... I give unto him also except the green say which I give unto Stephen Deane's child to make her a coat"; "one piece of new linen I give unto my son Andrew"; to "my daughter Susan Clarke my bed I lay upon with my gray coverlet & the ticks of the two pillows, but the feathers I give unto my son Andrew"; "one ruff I had of Goodman Gyles I give to my daughter Eliz. Deane"; residue "unto my daughters" equally divided; to "my son And[rew] all my books, my two pair of pothooks & my trammel, one coarse sheet to put his bed in, & all the money that is due to me from Goodman Gyles ... the piece of black stuff"; "the goods I give my two daughters are all my wearing clothes, all my wearing linen"; to "Mrs. Warren one wooden cup with a foot as a token of my love"; "the cattle I give my son be kept ... for him by Stephen Deane, or at the discretion of my overseers to take order for them for the good of the child"; "to Andrew my son all my handkerchiefs buttoned or unbuttoned ... one silver whistle"; "my will is that Andrew my son be left with my son Stephen Deane, and do require of my son Deane to help him forward in the knowledge & fear of God, not to oppress him by any burdens but to tender him as he will answer to God"; overseers "my loving friends Samuell Fuller & Thomas Blossom"; "my overseers see that those goods which I have given unto my son Andrew be carefully preserved for him until such time as they shall judge it meet to put them into his own hands"; "if my overseers shall see it meet to dispose of my son Andrew otherwise than with his Brother Deane, that then my son Deane shall be willing to consent unto it"; "I give unto Andrew a linen cap which was his father's, buttons for his handkerchief unbuttoned I leave for him"; "Andrew my son shall pay all my debts and charges about my burial" [MD 1:29-31, citing PCPR 1:4-5]. 

The inventory of the goods of "Mary Ring deceased" was "presented with the will of the said Mary by Thomas Prence whom Samuell Fuller requested to perform his charge & trust committed in behalf of the said Andrew & the said Thomas acknowledgeth to accept in public court the overseers of the will being both deceased & the child young"; the inventory was untotalled and included no real estate [MD 1:31, citing PCPR 1:5-6]. 

BIRTH: By about 1589 based on estimated date of marriage. DEATH: Plymouth 15 or 19 July 1631 (preamble to her will). MARRIAGE: By about 1609 William Ring, who died at Leiden between 1620 and 1629 [TAG 42:196]. 

CHILDREN: i ELIZABETH, b. say 1609; m. (1) say 1629 STEPHEN DEANE; m. (2) Plymouth 16 September 1635 JOSIAS COOKE [PCR 1:35]. 

ii SUSANNA, b. say 1611; m. by July 1631 THOMAS CLARK. 

iii ANDREW, b. about 1618 (d. 22 February 1692/3 in his 75th year [PChR 275; MD 4:193 (which explains why PVR 135 has the year of death wrong)]); m. (1) Plymouth 23 April 1646 Deborah Hopkins, daughter of STEPHEN HOPKINS [PCR 2:130]; m. (2) about 1674 Lettice (_____) Morton, widow of John Morton (son of GEORGE MORTON) [TAG 42:203]. 

COMMENTS: John Insley Coddington discussed this family at length in 1966 [TAG 42:193-205]. He found two potentially relevant entries in the Ufford, Suffolk, parish register: the marriage on 21 May 1601 of "Marie Durante of Ufford single woman" to Wylliam Ringe of Petistrey, singleman [TAG 42:193], and the baptism on 23 February 1602/3 of Elizabeth, their daughter [TAG 42:194]. Coddington stressed the unproven nature of the connection between the Ufford family and the Rings of Leiden. While the marriage date for Marie Durante and Wylliam Ringe is comfortable, daughter Elizabeth seems to have been as much as ten years older than usual at marriage and would have been nearly a decade older than her second husband. If the Ufford family is the one that came to New England, it is possible that the 1602/3 baptism is for a daughter Elizabeth who died young and the wife of Deane and Cooke is a subsequent daughter of the same name.

 

Source: https://www.ourfamtree.org/browse.php/William-Ring/p217238

 

Events

about 1577 : Birth - England
21 May 1601 : Marriage (with William Ring) - Ufford, Suffolk, England
Sources:
- Burgess Genealogical Library - Stratton, Eugene Aubrey, Plymouth Colony: Its History & People 1620-1691 Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986 - 974.470 H388 Strat - Surnames: Adams, Adey, Alden, Allerton, Annable, Atkinson, Atwood, Baker,
Bangs, Barker, Barnes, Bartlett, Basset, Beale, Beavan, Becket, Bennet,
Besbech, Biddle, Billington, Blossom, Bonham, Bonney, Boreman, Bourne,
Bowman, Bradford, Brewster, Brian, Bridges, Briggs, Britteridge, Browne,
Brown, Buck, Bulkeley, Bumpas, Bundy, Burcher, Button, Carpenter ...
Thomas Burgess mentioned but not included in biographical sketches. - 344
- The American Genealogist - 42 (1966):195
May 1629 : Immigration - Plymouth Colony
Sources:
- The American Genealogist - 42 (1966):195
- Burgess Genealogical Library - Compiler: John D. Austin, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: Descendants of the Pilgrims; Who Landed at Plymouth, Mass. December 1620, vo Plymouth: General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1992 - 12
- Burgess Genealogical Library - Melinde Lutz Sanborn, Supplement to Torrey's New England Marriages Prior to 1700 Baltimore, GPC, 1991 - 974 M177 - Condition: Excellent - 52
28 October 1631 : Probate
(15 JUL 1631 OR 19 JUL 1631) : Death - Plymouth, Plymouth County, Massachusetts
Sources:
- The American Genealogist - 42 (1966):196
- Burgess Genealogical Library - Stratton, Eugene Aubrey, Plymouth Colony: Its History & People 1620-1691 Salt Lake City: Ancestry Publishing, 1986 - 974.470 H388 Strat - Surnames: Adams, Adey, Alden, Allerton, Annable, Atkinson, Atwood, Baker,
Bangs, Barker, Barnes, Bartlett, Basset, Beale, Beavan, Becket, Bennet,
Besbech, Biddle, Billington, Blossom, Bonham, Bonney, Boreman, Bourne,
Bowman, Bradford, Brewster, Brian, Bridges, Briggs, Britteridge, Browne,
Brown, Buck, Bulkeley, Bumpas, Bundy, Burcher, Button, Carpenter ...
Thomas Burgess mentioned but not included in biographical sketches. - 344


 Notes

Individual Note

1 NAME Mary (Durrante) /Ring/


probably in the second

 

Mayflower

 

The Widow Mary Ring and her three
children, Elizabeth, Susanna, and Andrew, were very likely passengers on
the Mayflower (the second Pilgrim ship of that name), which
sailed from Gravesend in March and landed at Salem, Mass. on 15 May 1629.
After some delay, the Mayflower passengers were brought from Salem to
Plymouth by boat.

The Great Migration Begins:

MARY RING

ORIGIN: Leiden, Holland
MIGRATION: 1629 or 1630
FIRST RESIDENCE: Plymouth

EDUCATION: She signed her will. The inventory included "1 Bible. 1
Dod. 1 Plea for Infants. 1 Ruin of Rome. 1 Troubles of the Church of
Amsterdam. 1 Garland of Virtuous Dames. 1 psalmbook. 1 Pennery. 1 pair
hinges" valued at 4s.
ESTATE: In her undated will, proved 28 October 1633, "Mary Ring being
sick in body" bequeathed to "Andrew my son all my brass and pewter ... my
new bed & bolster ... two white blankets, one red blanket with the best
coverlet ... & the curtains ... three pair of my best sheets & two pair
of my best pillowbeers ... one diaper tablecloth & one diaper towel &
half a dozen of napkins ... all my woollen cloth unmade except one piece
of red which my will is that my daughter Susan shall have as much as will
make a bearing cloth and the remainder I give unto Stephen Deane's
child"; to "my son Andrew my bolster next the best ... my trunk & my box
& my cupboard ... all my cattle ... half the corn which groweth in the
yard where I dwell and the other half I give unto Stephen Deane"; "the
rest of my corn in other places I give to Andrew my son"; to "Steph.
Deane my [illegible] to make him a cloak"; "timber that I lent to Mr.
Winslow that cost me a pound of beaver, besides a piece more than they
had of me"; to "my son Andrew all my shares of land that is due to me or
shall be ... all my tools ... the money that is due to me from the
Governor 40s. as also the 40s. of commodities I am to have out of England
... I give unto him also except the green say which I give unto Stephen
Deane's child to make her a coat"; "one piece of new linen I give unto my
son Andrew"; to "my daughter Susan Clarke my bed I lay upon with my gray
coverlet & the ticks of the two pillows, but the feathers I give unto my
son Andrew"; "one ruff I had of Goodman Gyles I give to my daughter Eliz.
Deane"; residue "unto my daughters" equally divided; to "my son And[rew]
all my books, my two pair of pothooks & my trammel, one coarse sheet to
put his bed in, & all the money that is due to me from Goodman Gyles ...
the piece of black stuff"; "the goods I give my two daughters are all my
wearing clothes, all my wearing linen"; to "Mrs. Warren one wooden cup
with a foot as a token of my love"; "the cattle I give my son be kept ...
for him by Stephen Deane, or at the discretion of my overseers to take
order for them for the good of the child"; "to Andrew my son all my
handkerchiefs buttoned or unbuttoned ... one silver whistle"; "my will is
that Andrew my son be left with my son Stephen Deane, and do require of
my son Deane to help him forward in the knowledge & fear of God, not to
oppress him by any burdens but to tender him as he will answer to God";
overseers "my loving friends Samuell Fuller & Thomas Blossom"; "my
overseers see that those goods which I have given unto my son Andrew be
carefully preserved for him until such time as they shall judge it meet
to put them into his own hands"; "if my overseers shall see it meet to
dispose of my son Andrew otherwise than with his Brother Deane, that then
my son Deane shall be willing to consent unto it"; "I give unto Andrew a
linen cap which was his father's, buttons for his handkerchief unbuttoned
I leave for him"; "Andrew my son shall pay all my debts and charges about
my burial" [MD 1:29-31, citing PCPR 1:4-5].
The inventory of the goods of "Mary Ring deceased" was "presented with
the will of the said Mary by Thomas Prence whom Samuell Fuller requested
to perform his charge & trust committed in behalf of the said Andrew &
the said Thomas acknowledgeth to accept in public court the overseers of
the will being both deceased & the child young"; the inventory was
untotalled and included no real estate [MD 1:31, citing PCPR 1:5-6].

BIRTH: By about 1589 based on estimated date of marriage.
DEATH: Plymouth 15 or 19 July 1631 (preamble to her will).
MARRIAGE: By about 1609 William Ring, who died at Leiden between 1620
and 1629 [TAG 42:196].
CHILDREN:
i ELIZABETH, b. say 1609; m. (1) say 1629 STEPHEN DEANE; m. (2) Plymouth
16 September 1635 JOSIAS COOKE [PCR 1:35].
ii SUSANNA, b. say 1611; m. by July 1631 THOMAS CLARK.
iii ANDREW, b. about 1618 (d. 22 February 1692/3 in his 75th year [PChR
275; MD 4:193 (which explains why PVR 135 has the year of death wrong)]);
m. (1) Plymouth 23 April 1646 Deborah Hopkins, daughter of STEPHEN
HOPKINS [PCR 2:130]; m. (2) about 1674 Lettice (_____) Morton, widow of
John Morton (son of GEORGE MORTON) [TAG 42:203].

COMMENTS: John Insley Coddington discussed this family at length in 1966
[TAG 42:193-205]. He found two potentially relevant entries in the
Ufford, Suffolk, parish register: the marriage on 21 May 1601 of "Marie
Durante of Ufford single woman" to Wylliam Ringe of Petistrey, singleman
[TAG 42:193], and the baptism on 23 February 1602/3 of Elizabeth, their
daughter [TAG 42:194]. Coddington stressed the unproven nature of the
connection between the Ufford family and the Rings of Leiden. While the
marriage date for Marie Durante and Wylliam Ringe is comfortable,
daughter Elizabeth seems to have been as much as ten years older than
usual at marriage and would have been nearly a decade older than her
second husband. If the Ufford family is the one that came to New
England, it is possible that the 1602/3 baptism is for a daughter
Elizabeth who died young and the wife of Deane and Cooke is a subsequent
daughter of the same name.

 

 

 

Haben Sie Ergänzungen, Korrekturen oder Fragen im Zusammenhang mit Mary Durrant?
Der Autor dieser Publikation würde gerne von Ihnen hören!

Abbildung(en) Mary Durrant

Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von Mary Durrant

Mary Durrant
1577-1631

Mary Durrant

1601

William Ring
1572-1620

William Ring
1607-1693
Richard Ring
1609-1675
Susanna Ring
1615-1697
Susanna Ring
Andrew Ring
1618-1693

Mit der Schnellsuche können Sie nach Name, Vorname gefolgt von Nachname suchen. Sie geben ein paar Buchstaben (mindestens 3) ein und schon erscheint eine Liste mit Personennamen in dieser Publikation. Je mehr Buchstaben Sie eingeben, desto genauer sind die Resultate. Klicken Sie auf den Namen einer Person, um zur Seite dieser Person zu gelangen.

  • Kleine oder grosse Zeichen sind egal.
  • Wenn Sie sich bezüglich des Vornamens oder der genauen Schreibweise nicht sicher sind, können Sie ein Sternchen (*) verwenden. Beispiel: „*ornelis de b*r“ findet sowohl „cornelis de boer“ als auch „kornelis de buur“.
  • Es ist nicht möglich, nichtalphabetische Zeichen einzugeben, also auch keine diakritischen Zeichen wie ö und é.



Visualisieren Sie eine andere Beziehung

Quellen

  1. Geni World Family Tree, via https://www.myheritage.com/research/reco...
    Mary Ring (born Durrant)Gender: FemaleBirth: Circa 1581 - Ufford, Suffolk, , EnglandBaptism: Feb 15 1582Occupation: The Widow Ring. Came to America w 3 children in 1629.Marriage: Spouse: William Ring - May 21 1601 - Ufford, Suffolk, EnglandDeath: July 15 1631 - Plymouth, Plymouth Colony, MassachusettsBurial: Before 1632 - Plymouth, Plymouth County, MassachusettsFather: Thomas DurrantMother: Mary DurrantHusbands: William Ring, William Deane, Andrew RingChildren: Elizabeth Cooke (born Ring), Susanna Clarke (born Ring), Andrew Ring
    The Geni World Family Tree is found on http://www.geni.com" target="_blank">www.Geni.com. Geni is owned and operated by MyHeritage.
  2. McGirr Family Site (23andMe), Richie McGirr, Mary Durrant, 8. März 2017
    Added by confirming a Smart Match
    MyHeritage.com family tree Family site: McGirr Family Site (23andMe) Family tree: McGirr Family Tree

Historische Ereignisse

  • Stadhouder Prins Maurits (Huis van Oranje) war von 1585 bis 1625 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1601: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 17. Januar » Im Vertrag von Lyon werden Gebietsbereinigungen zwischen Frankreich und dem Herzogtum Savoyen vereinbart. Zentraler Streitpunkt zwischen den beiden Ländern war vor allem die Markgrafschaft Saluzzo.
    • 8. Februar » Robert Devereux, 2. Earl of Essex, Liebhaber von Königin Elisabeth I., versucht mit einem Staatsstreich die Kontrolle über England zu erringen, der Putsch wird jedoch niedergeschlagen.
    • 5. Juli » Während des niederländischen Unabhängigkeitskrieges beginnt die Belagerung von Ostende durch die Spanier.
    • 2. Oktober » Rund 3.400 spanische Soldaten landen zur Unterstützung der irischen Rebellen bei Kinsale. Sie werden jedoch sofort von englischen Truppen eingeschlossen. Die für den Neunjährigen Krieg entscheidende Belagerung von Kinsale beginnt.
    • 30. November » Die englische Königin Elisabeth I. richtet im Palace of Whitehall die Goldene Rede an die versammelten Parlamentsmitglieder, die sich bei ihr wegen ihrer Verteilung von Handelsrechten beschweren wollten.
    • 7. Dezember » Das aus Anlass des Reichstages einige Tage geführte Regensburger Religionsgespräch zwischen katholischen und lutherischen Theologen über die Heilige Schrift scheitert am Unvermögen, gegenseitige Herabwürdigungen zu unterlassen.
  • Stadhouder Prins Frederik Hendrik (Huis van Oranje) war von 1625 bis 1647 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden genannt)
  • Im Jahr 1631: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • 20. Mai » Kaiserliche Truppen unter dem Feldherrn Johann T’Serclaes von Tilly und Gottfried Heinrich zu Pappenheim erobern nach mehrmonatiger Belagerung im Dreißigjährigen Krieg das protestantische Magdeburg und begehen schwere Kriegsgräuel. In der so genannten „Magdeburger Hochzeit“ kommen rund 20.000 Menschen ums Leben.
    • 20. Juni » Korsaren aus Nordafrika überfallen den südirischen Hafenort Baltimore und verschleppen über 100 Bewohner in die Sklaverei.
    • 7. September » Kaiserliche Truppen unter Don Baltasar von Marradas erleiden im Dreißigjährigen Krieg nahe Breslau eine Niederlage gegen schwedische Truppen unter Hans Georg von Arnim.
    • 15. November » Prag wird im Dreißigjährigen Krieg von kursächsischen Truppen unter Hans Georg von Arnim-Boitzenburg eingenommen.
    • 24. November » Die Niederländer besetzen Olinda, die Hauptstadt Pernambucos, und stecken die Stadt in Brand. Sie wollen ihr Kapital lieber ins nahe gelegene Recife investieren.
    • 7. Dezember » Sächsische Truppen unter Hans Georg von Arnim-Boitzenburg bezwingen ein kaiserliches Heer unter dem Befehl Rudolf von Tiefenbachs im Dreißigjährigen Krieg bei der böhmischen Stadt Nimburg.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia


Über den Familiennamen Durrant

  • Zeigen Sie die Informationen an, über die Genealogie Online verfügt über den Nachnamen Durrant.
  • Überprüfen Sie die Informationen, die Open Archives hat über Durrant.
  • Überprüfen Sie im Register Wie (onder)zoekt wie?, wer den Familiennamen Durrant (unter)sucht.

Die Genealogy Ludwig-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Richard Oliver Ludwig, "Genealogy Ludwig", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogy-ludwig/I501091.php : abgerufen 25. April 2024), "Mary Durrant (1577-1631)".